Tivat
Tivat Тиват | ||
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Tivat | ||
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Tivat Location of Tivat | ||
Coordinates: 42°26′N 18°42′E / 42.43°N 18.70°ECoordinates: 42°26′N 18°42′E / 42.43°N 18.70°E | ||
Country | Montenegro | |
Founded | 14th century | |
Settlements | 12 | |
Government | ||
• Mayor | Ivan Novosel (DPS) | |
• Ruling party | DPS - SD | |
Area | ||
• Total | 46 km2 (18 sq mi) | |
Population (2011 census) | ||
• Total | 10,149 | |
• Density | 296/km2 (770/sq mi) | |
• Municipality | 14,111 | |
Demonym(s) | Tivćani | |
Time zone | CET (UTC+1) | |
• Summer (DST) | CEST (UTC+2) | |
Postal code | 85320 | |
Area code | +382 32 | |
ISO 3166-2 code | ME-19 | |
Car plates | TV | |
Website | http://www.tivat.travel/ |
Tivat (Montenegrin Cyrillic: Тиват, pronounced [tîv̞at], Italian: Teodo) is a coastal town in southwest Montenegro, located in the Bay of Kotor. As of 2011, its population was 14,111. Tivat is the centre of Tivat Municipality, which is the smallest municipality by area in Montenegro.
Name
In and Montenegrin the town is known as Tivat or Тиват; in Italian and Venetian as Teodo; the name of the city comes from Greek Θείοδος (Thiodhos meaning "way of God").
History
The name Tivat apparently goes back to the 3rd century BC. According to most sources, the name comes from the old Illyric queen Teute, who had a residence was in Risan and a summer residence between the church of St Roco in Donja Lastva and Seljanovo. The name could also come from the names of old Christian saints: Saint Theodulus, Theodocius or Theodotus. Besides the popular name Theudo, a Latin expression Latus Tiuveti comes from the 16th century. Finally, the name could originate from Celtic word "touto", town.
Tivat, the youngest town in the Boka area was established on the plateau at the bottom of Vrmac. According to the archives of Kotor (then called "Cattaro"), the following names were mentioned here in the 14th century: Teude, Theode, and Theudo who are related to the queen Teuta.
Archeological discoveries in modern times show that this area had been inhabited from prehistoric times. Many locations show that there were old Roman and Greek settlements there. Tombs and tombstones from the Roman period were discovered in Lastva and Opatovo.
During the Middle Ages the fertile lands of the area belonged mostly to the aristocrats of Cattaro, Prčanj and Dobrota. Estates, castles and chalets were there as well as the collective church of St. Anton dating from 1373. Part of this inheritance, which was the property of the wealthy Dalmatian Italian Buća family,[1] is a historic chalet which today houses Tivat’s museums and galleries. The residence of the metropolitan of the Zetan diocese was built from the 13th to the 15th century on Prevlaka Island.
Tivat (called Teodo in Venetian language), was under the Republic of Venice as a part of Albania Veneta from 1420 to 1797. In those centuries Teodo enjoyed economic development that attracted many Serbs as refugees from Ottoman-held areas. Some Venetian-style buildings are still standing today.
Rapid development of Tivat started in the second half of 19th century when the Austrian empire built a maritime arsenal for its fleet. Still the town shaped itself by developing small industry. In the beginning of 1918, in the Tivat Bay sailors revolted against the mighty Austrian empire. With great approval and support, people from this area followed their revolutionary actions. The period between two world wars was marked with syndicate activity in Račica, Krtoli and Arsenal. Between 1941 and 1943 the town was part of the Italian Governatorate of Dalmatia.
In 1889 the Naval arsenal was built by Austrians, and was later used as a naval military base of the Italian Navy, the Yugoslav People's Army and the Army of Montenegro. The JNA enjoyed an international reputation as a powerful, well-equipped, and well-trained force. The base was also used by Russia and Libya as the technical base for maintenance, repair and overhaul (MRO) of their ships and submarines.
The new owner of the naval base, Canadian billionaire Peter Munk, announced plans in 2011 to build in Tivat a luxury marina for mega-yachts, "Porto Montenegro", which he claims will turn the city into the "Monaco of the southern Adriatic."
Geography
Tivat is located in the central part of the Boka, south of mount Vrmac. The municipality lies mostly south of the town, and has an exit to open sea at the tourist location Pržno inlet near Radovići village to the south. Its central part, where Tivat Airport is located, lies in fertile Grbalj valley. The airport is located near the isthmus of Luštica peninsula, which belongs to the municipality of Herceg Novi for the most part.
Its geographical position, climate and natural beauty make it an attractive tourist destination. Boka was described and celebrated in verse by many poets, writers and scientists: Vuk Karadžić, Ljubomir Nenadović, Njegoš, Matavulj, Laza Kostić, Šantić, Jovan Cvijić and many others. Boka has captured many writers of travels from England, Germany and France, among them: Padget, Lamb, Fraser, Gilles Verne and Pierre Loti. American Boyd said: ”God made the world in six days, and on the seventh day he took his time and created this fjord under Lovcen.” With its mild Mediterranean climate, evergreen and rich flora, many sunny days and calm sea in the bay, Tivat is equally suitable for summer and winter holidays.
Tivat has about 14,000 inhabitants. It is 19 kilometres (12 miles) away from Herceg Novi, 17 km (10.6 mi) away from Kotor, 23 km (14 mi) away from Budva, 80 km (50 mi) from Dubrovnik and 90 km (56 mi) from Podgorica. Geomorphologically, Tivat is composed of three areas. The first is the hills and peaks of Vrmac, Velji Vrh (710 metres (2,329 feet)) and Popova glava (584 metres (1,916 feet)). Water activity formed capes Seljanovo, Pakovo and Račica. The second area is Tivat field, flattened by water activity. The third area is Krtoli with islands – Island of Flowers, St Marko, and Lady of Mercy which is bordered by Novski bay on the north-west and Grbalj area on the south-east.
Government
The municipal parliament consists of 32 deputies elected directly for a five year term. Following the last local election held on 17 April 2016, the ruling DPS has an absolute majority with 17 deputies. The election was boycotted by opposition parties DF, Democrats, URA and Demos.[2]
Party | Seats |
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Democratic Party of Socialists (DPS) | 17 |
Social Democrats (SD) | 4 |
Social Democratic Party (SDP) | 2 |
Socialist People's Party (SNP) | 2 |
Tivat Action (TA) | 2 |
Croatian Civic Initiative (HGI) | 2 |
Democratic Serb Party (DSS) | 1 |
Arsenal for Tivat (AzT) | 1 |
Boka Forum (BF) | 1 |
Population
Tivat is the administrative centre of Tivat municipality, which has a population of 14,031 (2011). In 1991 - 11,404:
- 3,809 Montenegrins (33.4%)
- 2,663 Croats (23.35%)
- 2,346 Yugoslavs (20.57%)
- 1,724 Serbs (15.11%)
- 219 Muslims (1.92%)
- 485 others (4.27%)
Ethnic groups (2011 data),[3] totally 14,031:
- 4,666 Montenegrins (33.25%)
- 4,435 Serbs (31.61%)
- 2,304 Croats (16.42%)
- 335 Egyptians (2.39%)
- 114 Muslims (0.81%)
- 97 Albanians (0.69%)
- 96 Bosniaks (0.68%)
- 61 Yugoslavs (0.43%)
- 57 Slovenes (0.41%)
- 56 Russians (0.4%)
- 35 Roma (0.25%)
- 500 others (3.56%)
- 1,275 undeclared (9.09%)
Languages
- Serbian: 8,916 (65.41%)
- Montenegrin 2,420 (17.75%)
- Croatian 1,144 (8.39%)
- rest and unknown 1,150 (8.45%)
Tourism
Already a popular tourist resort, Tivat is set to become a nautical tourism centre for the southern Adriatic.
The inlets near Prevlaka, as well as the localities of Župa and Kalimanj, provide great conditions for the construction of marinas and yachting clubs. Canadian businessman Peter Munk bought a naval shipyard in Tivat, intending to transform it into a luxury vacation resort and a marina for luxury yachts called Porto Montenegro.
In 1971 Tivat Airport acquired a modern runway and is now a significant airport for foreign air traffic. It served 573,914 passengers in 2007.
Although it is the youngest town in the Boka region, Tivat has many attractive destinations. Renaissance Summer House Buca in the centre of city, Ostrvo Cvijeća (Flowers’ Island) with sacred monuments, Gornja Lastva, the old nucleus at an altitude of 300 m (984.25 ft), the magnificent sandy beach at Plavi Horizonti and the Sveti Marko Island with ex-Club Med cottages are the most visited. In the city itself there is the natural port Kalimanj. There is also a choice of cultural events, such as "Bocce Olympiad" and "Summer Fest". Tivat boasts a botanic garden planted with gifts from Bokan sailors who brought back a wide variety of exotic tree species and ornamental plants from their voyages. It is very popular and beautiful place to visit, though some hotels and apartments there are still in the process of construction.
Transport
Tivat is connected with the rest of Montenegro by Adriatic Highway, a two-laned road that extends for the length of Montenegrin coast. Reaching inland is made possible by detouring from the Adriatic Highway at Budva or Sutomore (through Sozina tunnel).
The ferry operates on Kamenari - Lepetane line at Verige strait, eliminating the need to go all the way around Boka Kotorska bay in order to reach Herceg Novi riviera. It is speculated that on this ferry route the future Verige bridge will be built.
Tivat Airport is 3 km (1.9 mi) away. This is the biggest airport in Montenegro, although Podgorica airport is more modern. There are regular flights to Belgrade throughout the year, and dozens of charter planes land daily on Tivat airport during the summer season.
Twin towns
Tivat is twinned with:
References
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Tivat. |
- 360 PANOTOUR TIVAT
- Tivat City Travel Guide
- Destination-Montenegro.com
- Visit-Montenegro.com
- Photo-Montenegro.com
- Tivat Travel Guide
- Tourist Organization of Tivat
- Apartments in Tivat
- A New Playground for the Rich - slideshow by The New York Times